Harriet Tubman will replace Andrew Jackson on the $20 bill and Alexander Hamilton will stay on the face of the $10 bill, Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew announced Wednesday.

Lew announced last summer that he was considering replacing Hamilton on the front of the $10 bill with a woman. But the move was criticized by supporters of former Treasury Secretary Hamilton, also the subject of a current hit musical.

“We knew that we couldn’t make everyone happy,” Lew told reporters on a conference call. He added that forthcoming changes to three notes allowed the Treasury “to tell more stories.”

Tubman was a Civil War-era abolitionist. An image of Jackson, the seventh U.S. president and a slave owner, will appear on the reverse of the new $20 bill, Lew said.

The reverse side of the new $10 bill will feature an image of the march for suffrage and honor leaders of the movement including Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

Lew also announced changes to the reverse side of the $5 bill. He said it would honor events at the Lincoln Memorial and prominent individuals who participated, including Martin Luther King Jr. The front of the $5 note will continue to feature Abraham Lincoln.

Lew said final designs for the new $20, $10 and $5 notes would be unveiled in 2020. He said the redesigned $10 bill will go into circulation next and the goal is to have all notes go into circulation “as quickly as possible.”

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